Fahrenheit 451 Literary Analysis

Words: 495
Pages: 2

Who would have ever thought that books would become socially unacceptable. Ray Bradbury believes that our society has the ability to reach that type of insanity. In his award winning novel, Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury creates a society where life is unimportant and books are irrelevant. To own a book of their own, the characters had to be incredibly secretive. The secrecy that one specific character, Guy Montag, had to evoke caused intense problems in a technology based society of people totally against books.
Bradbury's fictional society believed that books were pointless. People hated and feared all books because books were known to "show the pores in the face of life." Everyone in this society allowed technology to run their lives because they were afraid of what the truth of books would do to them. Instead of dealing with the truth, they acted like it did not exist. Burning books was easier for them than learning the truth about humanity. All books were given the death sentence.
…show more content…
He simply read that line and his hand "closed like a mouth, crushed the book with wild devotion, with an insanity of mindlessness to his chest." Once he had a book in his possession, his outlook on books changed completely. Montag read a poem out of a book to three ladies. When he finished, one of the ladies was crying. Mildred was infuriated when she told Montag "that's what I wanted to prove! I knew it would happen! I've always said, poetry and tears, poetry and suicide and crying and awful feelings, poetry and sickness; all that mush!... You're nasty, Mr. Montag, you're nasty!" Although Montag was for books, his wife, Mildred, remained totally against